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This is from CWA > Issue 50 > News > Armenia > Armenia: 5900-year-old women’s skirt found in cave

Armenia: 5900-year-old women’s skirt found in cave

November 6, 2011 by Chris Catling Filed Under: Issue 50, News, Armenia

Excavations at Areni 1 Cave in the Vayots Dzor region, on Armenia’s border with Iran and Turkey, have unearthed parts of a well-preserved woman’s skirt of woven straw, which has been dated to 3900 BC. Excavation Director, Pavel Avetisyan, of the Armenian Archaeology and Ethnography Institute, said ‘It is an amazing material with rhythmic
colour hues’. Experts are working on its conservation, after which the skirt will be exhibited at the History Museum of Armenia. The same cave, Areni 1, has already produced the world’s oldest enclosed leather shoe — complete with laces — dating from the Chalcolithic period, about 3500 BC, outdating the shoes worn by Ötzi the Iceman by 200 years.


This article is an extract from the full article published in World Archaeology Issue 50. Click here to subscribe

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welcome to world archaeology

Welcome to Current World Archaeology, the magazine that studies archaeology round the world.

CWA was founded in 2003 as a sister magazine to Current Archaeology which, since 1967, has been reporting on the latest discoveries in British archaeology.

But CWA does not just look at the latest discoveries: it also travels the globe, looking at great monuments around the world, explaining how they came to be the sites - and sights - we see today.

Caitlin McCall, Editor

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